The theory and praxis of biblical law in the historical and
contemporary landscape of American law and culture is contentious
and controversial. Richard Hiers provides a new consideration of
the subject with an emphasis upon the underlying justice and
compassion implicit within. Special consideration is given to
matters of civil law, the death penalty, and due process. An
analysis of various biblical trial scenes are also included.
The book draws on, and in turn relates to three areas of
scholarship and concern: biblical studies, social ethics, and
jurisprudence (legal theory). Modern legal categories often
illuminate the nature of biblical law: for instance, by
distinguishing between inheritance and bequests or wills (a
distinction not found in traditional biblical commentaries), and by
identifying the meaning or function of biblical laws by using such
categories as "contract" and "tort" law, "due process," "equal
protection," and "social welfare legislation."
Several discussions throughout the book compare or contrast
biblical laws with modern Anglo-American law or social policies.
Each chapter begins with two or three relevant quotations: one or
two from biblical texts, and sometimes from one or two relevant
latter-day sources, notably, Magna Carta, the United States
Constitution, and writings by Ayn Rand, and Robert Bellah. Although
modern law usually shows greater compassion, biblical law often
combines concern for both justice and compassion in ways that
sometime provide grounds for critiquing modern counterparts.
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